As the Phonics Screening Check is only next week, here as some simple facts for parents.

The Phonics screening check is a compulsory assessment that all children in Year 1 must take. It is used to assess a students phonic decoding skills. To pass a student must correctly read around 32/40 words correctly.

The 40 words in the check are split into sections progressing from simple word structures to trickier words with five or six letters. The often confusing thing about the screening check is that 20/40 of the words that children are expected to read are ‘nonsense words’, alien words that have no meaning. This really tests a child’s phonic decoding skills to check they have the appropriate standard.

When is the Phonics Screening Check?

The check is administered by a child’s teacher during the designated phonics screening week. In 2016 this is the week starting the 13th June. It will be a one to one check and your child will be given some practice words first including nonsense words. The words are the same all across the country. Schools are sent the screening check through the post in a sealed box and teachers are not allowed to open the test until the start of that week.

What is the pass mark?

Your child will be scored against a national average which has been 32 since 2013. The mark will be told to schools at the end of June and can be released to parents. Individual children’s results will not be published.

What can I do to help?

There are past phonics screening checks from 2012 – 2015 on our website www.fonics.co.uk  just follow the link in the pink circle directly on the homepage. You can also download Fonics to use on the tablet, coming soon online!

https://itunes.apple.com/gb/app/fonics/id1076917885?mt=8

Or watch my Phonics screening hints and tips video!

Perhaps the important take away from all this is to not stress out, and certainly don’t let your child feel anxious about the check in anyway. If a child can read, this check is easy.